Enlarged Southside Irrigation Ditch Co. v. John's Flood Ditch Co.

210 P.2d 982, 120 Colo. 423, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 13, 1949
DocketNo. 16,121.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 210 P.2d 982 (Enlarged Southside Irrigation Ditch Co. v. John's Flood Ditch Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Enlarged Southside Irrigation Ditch Co. v. John's Flood Ditch Co., 210 P.2d 982, 120 Colo. 423, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 228 (Colo. 1949).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court.

Insofar as we are presently concerned, this action is in the nature of a suit brought by plaintiffs in error to enjoin or limit the taking of early decreed waters of the John’s Flood Ditch, by an extension thereof,. into the Model reservoir and ditch and the use thereof in irrigation of lands in the Model tract lying thereunder. The case was previously considered by us in Enlarged Southside Irrigation Ditch Company, et al. v. John’s Flood Ditch Company, et al., 116 Colo. 580, 183 P. (2d) 552, wherein we remanded the casé for finding by the trial court on the issue of increased use and changed conditions, if any, resulting from this use of these early priorities. Upon retrial, the only further evidence received was a decree- of January 12, 1925, awarding to the Model Ditch 200 cubic feet of water per second of time junior to the rights of all other ditches here concerned, and certain testimony as to the John’s Flood Ditch taken in the adjudication proceeding wherein that decree was entered. Upon the basis of the testimony introduced at the first hearing and the additional testimony mentioned, the trial court made findings, including the following:

“5. That from and after the date of the acquisition by *425 the said defendant, The Model Land and' Irrigation Company, of said rights in said John’s Flood Ditch, to the present time, there has not been diverted from the said Las Animas river, or otherwise, through and by means of the said John’s Flood ditch any greater quantity of water, measured either in volume or time, than had been theretofore diverted and used by and through said John’s Flood ditch for beneficial application to the lands originally irrigated by said ditch.
“6. That the aforesaid change in place of use and application of the priorities of the right to the use of water belonging, awarded and decreed’ to said John’s Flood ditch, did not, and does not, constitute or create any enlarged use of said appropriations or priorities of right to the use of water belonging to said ditch, and that there is not now, and never has been, since the acquisition of the right, title and interest of the said defendant, The Model Land and Irrigation Company, in and to the ditch, water rights, appropriations and priorities of right to the use of water awarded, decreed and belonging to the owners of the said John’s Flood ditch, any enlarged or extended use of said water, water rights and appropriations awarded, decreed and belonging to said John’s Flood ditch.”

Pursuant to such findings the court refused to limit or enjoin the diversion and use of waters of the John’s Flood Ditch through the Model ditch and reservoir upon lands of the Model tract. These findings and consistent decree of the court are here challenged by specifications which go to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings.

The factual background here involved is set out in our previous opinion in this case. In brief, the evidence discloses that at an adjudication proceeding in the year 1903, there were awarded early priorities to each of the three ditches here involved, those of the Hoehne and John’s Flood Ditch being of dates all prior to 1872, and those of the Enlarged Southside Ditch being of early *426 date, but junior to those of the other two. All these water rights have been, and still are, used in the irrigation of lands lying in the river bottom near Hoehne. The needs of the land for irrigation of which priorities were awarded to the John’s Flood Ditch did not require full-time use of the waters so decreed to it, with the result that the water was frequently left in the stream where it was available for use by the Enlarged South-side Ditch in supplying its junior priorities and all unused seep and return waters found their way back to the stream where they were available to supply the earlier priorities of three ditches diverting water several miles below.

In 1919, the Model Land and Irrigation Company, having purchased some 2,000 acres of land lying under and in part irrigated by the John’s Flood Ditch, together with 60 percent interest' in the ditch and approximately a half. interest in the early priorities decreed to it, extended the ditch from its former terminus to the Model reservoir. Thereafter water diverted into the ditch and not used in irrigation thereunder on the lands formerly irrigated thereby could be, and was, carried to the reservoir and from there through the Model ditch to a 20,000-acre tract of land known as the Model tract, situate several miles away and outside the valley where the water had theretofore been exclusively used. It is this use of the early water rights awarded to the John’s Flood Ditch in the irrigation of lands of the Model tract, which plaintiffs in error have sought to have enjoined and which the trial court has held does not create an enlarged use of said priorities and does not constitute diversion from the river of any greater quantity of water measured either in volume or time than had been theretofore diverted and used by and through said ditch for beneficial application to the lands originally irrigated by said ditch.

Contemporaneous with the findings and decree herein, the trial court gave an opinion explanatory of those find *427 ings. Such opinion, so far as it pertains to the increased use of water, is as follows:

“As to increased acreage, it will be noted that in Protestants’ Exhibit 5, the total irrigated area in the Hoehne district under the John’s ditch, is 1980 acres. It will also be' noted that in the decree entered January 12th, 1925, it is recited in the sixth paragraph: ‘That within a reasonable time after the construction thereof, water has been applied thru and by means of said ditch for beneficial purposes to the irrigation of approximately 2300 acres of land, to the extent of 100 cubic feet of water per second of time, in addition to the adjudicated priorities thereof, which were applied to approximately 1100 acres of land.’
“I take that to mean that the 2300 acres represents the total acreage irrigated in the Hoehne district, in addition to the early priorities, and this finding of the Court in said decree, is certainly conclusive as to the amount of lands irrigated in the Hoehne district prior to the time of the extension of the John’s Flood ditch into the reservoir. It necessarily follows, that the land irrigated in the Hoehne district by the water from the John Flood Ditch, as shown on the map, does not exceed the amount found by the Court in said decree.”

This opinion shows total failure to understand the issues to be determined by the court. Instead of supporting the court’s finding, it contradicts it. The essence of this opinion, as supported by the finding of the court in the 1925 adjudication, is that the water rights of early priority with which we are here involved, amounting to approximately 24 second feet, had been appropriated for and used in the irrigation of approximately 1,100 acres of land in the Hoehne district and that at the time of the trial, the acreage irrigated in that district had been increased to 1980 acres.

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Bluebook (online)
210 P.2d 982, 120 Colo. 423, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enlarged-southside-irrigation-ditch-co-v-johns-flood-ditch-co-colo-1949.